At the Game Creators Conference in Osaka, Japan, Nintendo announced that Nintendo Switch development kits would be available for 50,000 yen, or around $450. One of the huge barriers to entry for independent developers has been obtaining the development tools necessary to publish software on consoles. However, Nintendo looks poised to court indie studios by making their hardware very affordable for even one-man development teams.

The Nintendo Switch dev kit will be one of the cheapest to date, much cheaper than the $20,000 a PlayStation 3 development kit cost, and even less pricey than the much more reasonable $2,500 PlayStation 4 dev kit. With so many very successful titles coming from smaller independant studios, Nintendo is smart to make the move to secure indie interest in the Switch. Third-party software support was terrible for the Wii U, and Nintendo has had issues with steady third-party support for its consoles since the Nintendo 64, except the Wii which was where every game studio in the world dumped its shovelware.

A steady stream of indie titles can go a long way to keeping players who are waiting for Nintendo's first-party titles engaged. With a stellar showing of support from third-party partners, the Nintendo Switch might be the most open and experimental of Nintendo's consoles yet. We'll get to see for ourselves just what the Nintendo Switch can do when it releases on March 3.

It seems to have already done so, given the easy portability of Unity & Unreal engines plus the low Switch devkit costs we already have had a ton of indies pledge games coming to the Switch within the first quarter.

I assumed that, but since I have very little art talent I was kinda discounting that stuff. Stick figures and simple sounds would have to do. The game would likely totally suck too. I'd just be curious if I could get some sprites to move around the screen with animations over a background.

Since Unity and UE4 are supported, you can download those for free and start making stuff. You don't need a dev-kit to tinker. If you get to the point that you want to play on a Switch, you just tell it to target the Switch and it'll do all the internal stuff for you. Unity is probably the easiest to start with since it's C# while UE4 is C++. Though you can use blueprints in UE4 which essentially visual scripting. It's pretty cool and worth looking at. The dude who made the Solus Project created it using only blueprints: